Oh goody. We've done ~$100B research to replace the shovel.Yes there are: transmuting long lived nuclear waste.
Anwyays, the goal is economic power production.
It's just a PowerPoint slide. Anyways, FRCs are looking at the same thing.There's already a start up company looking into this application.
Again, it's easy to be the best at something when you have orders of magnitude more resources. This should not be regarded as an endorsement of the technology path.Tokamaks are the best performing fusion devices to date.
There was a time when steam engines were the best performing engines.
Tokamaks don't "work" in any commercial sense of the word. They're just nice science projects with no economic value.You want to divert funding away from something that does work and spend it on something that doesn't work with no proof it will?
A better question: why waste even more money on a path that we know, after $100B, cannot lead to economic fusion power, when alternatives exist that can be researched at a fraction of the cost?
We already have one that's practically limitless: fission. That will last at least a thousand years. Tokamak fusion is too expensive to compete. If we can't find something better in 500 years, maybe we can dust off those ITER plans.In anycase 100B over 50 years to research a limitless source of infinite energy is not too bad.
It is different. It's high beta. That has implications for the size, which has implications for the cost, which has implications for the commercialization.There's nothing wrong with that but don't try to make out its any different or better than tokamaks.